Adeline Champion, age 4, waits as her mother Alissa Champion and her grandmother Alison Champion are interviewed at the BB&T Center in Sunrise for the re-start of the D-SNAP hurricane relief program, Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2017.

JOE CAVARETTA / Sun Sentinel

Thousands of people converged on two of South Florida’s sports sites for the final day of sign-ups for Hurricane Irma food stamps.

Sign-ups for the Food for Florida program run through 7 p.m. at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens and the BB&T Center in Sunrise.

More than 38,000 families have registered at Hard Rock Stadium for the disaster food program since sign-ups started Tuesday, according to DCF.

At Hard Rock on Wednesday, those in line by 2:30 p.m. had their applications processed, but those arriving after that time were asked to come back the next day, said David Frady, a spokesman with the Florida Department of Children and Families.

After people looking for food assistance waited in lines up to eight hours long, the state has announced extra days for sign up for the Disaster Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program, or D-SNAP.

The state has processed about 937,000 D-SNAP applications so far. In addition to replacement assistance for people who already get food stamps, Florida has provided nearly $1.2 billion in food assistance.